Editorial Commentary


Early neuromuscular blockade in acute respiratory distress syndrome: to personalize or paralyze?

Ken Kuljit S. Parhar, Kevin Solverson, Vasileios Zochios

Abstract

Acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) is an inflammatory condition of the lungs characterized by acute hypoxemic respiratory failure and non-cardiogenic pulmonary edema (1). This is typically caused by direct lung injury (e.g., pneumonia); however, it can also be the result of indirect injury as well (e.g., non-pulmonary sepsis). ARDS is associated with significant mortality (1-3). Severity is graded using the arterial to inspired oxygen ratio (PF ratio) and can prognosticate survival and ventilator-free days (1-3). Those that survive are often left with significant reductions in functional capacity (4).

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